High speed (over 350 km/h) Formula-1 racing on simplified versions of known circuits around the world. Collision with other car ends with explosion. Number of laps is indefinite on stage 5 on all 3 skill levels. Friction is low on level 3. For FamiCom only.

This is the BIOS for the Famicom Disk System, an add-on to the Famicom in Japan that allowed it to play special games released on disks. Some emulators may require this ROM to be present before FDS games can be played.

Family BASIC allows users to program simple games and other applications using a dialect of the programming language BASIC. It was released only in Japan and was intended for use with the Famicom Keyboard. Programs written in Family BASIC could be saved to cassette using a cassette tape recorder. It allowed users to utilize graphics from earlier Nintendo games (such as Mario Bros. and Donkey Kong) in their programs.

Ring King, known in the PAL regions as King of Boxer, and known in Japan as Family Boxing (ファミリーボクシング Famirī Bokushingu), is an arcade boxing game published in 1985 by Data East in North America and by Woodplace, Inc. in the PAL regions.

An NES version of the classic board game Othello, also sometimes called Reversi. "Sandwich" rows of your opponent's pieces by positioning one of yours on each side, then flip them over to turn them into your own pieces. You win by having the most pieces on the board when the board is filled or when no further moves are possible. This version allows you to play against a friend or a computer with multiple difficulty settings.

Just a simple fight with no weapons for the player. Players can kick the opponent, stop some weapons and hit into the face. Bonus stage appears every 4 levels. Game is repetitive. For Famicom only, but in English.

this is a port of the Mega Drive Game known as F1 Hero MD,However The North American and European versions of the Mega Drive/Genesis game are known as Ferrari Grand Prix Challenge in honor of the Ferrari brand of racing vehicles. This is a simplified version that allows players to practice up to six laps or qualify for every Formula One race of the season, it uses kilometers per hour instead of miles per hour, the top speed of the vehicle is 220mph or 355kph and turbo is not used. Tire wear is an issue, a radio keeps you in touch with the Pit Chief, who will notify you if pitting is necessary. It was developed by System 3 and published by Acclaim in North America and Europe under the name Ferrari Grand Prix Challenge and under the name Ferrari(フェラーリ?)in Japan by Coconuts. It is one of the few 8-bit Formula One video games to more adequately represent the 1990 Formula One season. Not to be confused with the Japan Famicom Cartridge Game "Nakajima Satoru - F-1 Hero" that is known in North America as "Michael Andretti's World Grand Prix", this is not F-1 Hero, it's F1 Hero MD "Ferrari Grand Prix Challenge"..

This is the best game of the Kunio Kun No series. It also support up to 4 players which is really fun. This game had been translated to many languages such as English, Persian, Russian, Spanish, Polish, Chinese, Turkish by Kunio fans.

As a half-human, half-robot member of the Special Cybernetic Attack Team, you (and a friend, in two-player co-operative mode) must fight your way through five futuristic, auto-scrolling stages on your way to defeating Vile Malmort and his army of alien invaders. The Japanese version (Final Mission) is significantly more difficult than the American or European releases.

Flappy is an action-puzzle game starring the titular mole-like creature who must navigate room after room of enemies and obstacles, only advancing once he figures out how to move that room's blue boulder onto the blue platform. It's more difficult than it sounds--each room has been designed to test your logic and problem-solving skills, and the puzzles become progressively more sophisticated. You'll also be menaced by Flappy's enemies--the simple-minded Unicorns and the aggressive crab-like Ebiras.

This simple pinball game was one of the launch titles for the NES in North America and Famicom for Japanese market. The pinball table is split between two screens (upper and lower), with a third screen used for a Breakout-style bonus round featuring Mario and Pauline from Donkey Kong.

Shooting into textures within police training. Empty wall, city and
can factory landscapes are included here. Time changes a little bit in city mode. Do not shoot into unarmed textures, but avoid cop. For NES & FamiCom.

Shooting on earth and in space. Between fields, deserts and even Moon's craters. Gravity is the same on the Moon in this game. Players need to destroy 2 spaceships: one on water flight after desert shooting scene, and the other after Moon exploration. Watch out for mosquitoes in the desert. For FamiCom and 2 players, but alternative turns.

In Menace Beach, your girlfriend has been kidnapped by Devil Dan and it's up to you to rescue her! You'll run into ninjas and other various foes along the way who want to ensure you never reach your destination.
After the developer, Color Dreams, changed its name to Wisdom Tree and began producing unlicensed Christian-themed video games, Menace Beach was retooled into Sunday Funday. The enemies were changed (new bosses include a fat lady and an Elvis impersonator) and the plot was altered so that now, instead of rescuing your increasingly scantily clad girlfriend, you're trying to make it to church.

One of the most famous and beloved games ever, Super Mario Bros. set the standard for the platformer genre. Until 2009, it was the best selling video game of all time. As Mario (or Luigi), you'll have to travel across thirty-two unique levels ranging from snow-covered tundras to underground caverns to vast oceans, each filled with Goombas, Koopa Troopas, and Piranha Plants to rescue Princess Peach from Bowser. Aiding your quest will be useful power-ups like the Super Mushroom, Fire Flower, and Starman.